“I will work hard over the next several weeks to earn the votes of all our citizens,” Norwood said in a release last week after she qualified in the race. “If I win, all of Atlanta will win.”

Bottoms, who attended the unveiling of the new Martin Luther King Jr. statue at the Georgia state capitol on Monday, said she was pleased where her campaign’s progression, adding that her top three topics — education, transportation and crime — are resonating with voters looking for her leadership.

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“The support and the momentum is behind me and I’m very excited about winning,” she said.

Aman, who has improved several points since Channel 2’s poll last spring, said his campaign has employed an iceberg strategy. While he has worked to build name recognition on the surface, the effort to build a base has been beneath the surface.

“It was always part of the plan, and we’re thrilled that the WSB poll shows what our internal polling has been showing,” he said. “We have have had five polls in the last few months and it has been a consistent trend up for us.”

TheWSB-Channel 2 survey, which was conducted by Landmark Communications, had a margin of error of 4.37 percent. About 17.4 percent of voters had no opinion or were undecided.

Atlanta City Council President Ceasar Mitchell was in fourth place in the poll at 10.4 percent, followed by former Atlanta City Council President Cathy Woolard at 6.6 percent. State Sen. Vincent Fort received 6.1 percent of the vote in the poll while Atlanta City Councilman Kwanza Hall was at 5.2 percent.

John Eaves, who resigned last week as Fulton County Commission Chairman to quality for his run for mayor, was at 3.6 percent.